No-Burn Order Extended Through Monday in Much of SoCal

No-Burn Order Extended Through Monday in Much of SoCal
A Group of people sit around a fire camp. AP Photo/Darko Bandic
City News Service
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LOS ANGELES—The South Coast Air Quality Management District has extended a mandatory prohibition on indoor and outdoor wood burning in much of Southern California through Dec. 26 due to a forecast of high air pollution in the area.

The residential wood-burning ban will be in effect until at least 11:59 p.m. Monday. It affects all those in the South Coast Air Basin, including the non-desert portions of Los Angeles, Riverside, and San Bernardino counties, and all of Orange County.

The order does not apply to mountain communities above 3,000 feet, the Coachella Valley, or the high desert. Homes that rely on wood as a sole source of heat, low-income households, and those without natural gas service also are exempt from the requirement.

The no-burn rule prohibits burning wood as well as manufactured fire logs, such as those made from wax or paper. Gas and other non-wood burning fireplaces are not restricted, the district said.

Fine particles in wood smoke, also known as particulate matter or PM2.5, can get deep into the lungs and cause respiratory problems such as asthma.

Residents can receive no-burn day notifications by signing up for Air Alerts via email or text on its website.
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